Some knockouts are spectacular — there’s virtually no sight in sport as breathtaking as a person being suddenly and violently removed from consciousness. Others are surprising — upsets and come-from-behind victories, walk off home runs in the bottom of the ninth. Others still are significant within the sport — a championship run ended, a prospect exposed, a stadium packed.

The Queensberry Rules’ choice for 2015 Knockout of the Year meets at least two of those criteria: Saul “Canelo” Alvarez’s brutal KO of James Kirkland in Houston on May 9 was important, but more than anything it was eye-catching.

The crushing right that floored Kirkland in the 3rd round came as a surprise only to Kirkland, however. Everyone else was only shocked he’d survived so long. The Texan junior middleweight’s force of will was not enough to overcome his skills deficit, and the fight was largely target practice for Canelo. When he finally dropped the boom, the unflappable redhead had already sent Kirkland to the canvas twice, with punches that would have been strong contenders for this award had “The Mandingo Warrior” stayed down.

The coup de grâce was even more dramatic. Wobbly, his back to the ropes, and not much of a stylist at the best of times, Kirkland was a sitting duck.

Canelo offered a driving jab to the body, which Kirkland obligingly attempted to parry, dropping his hands for the crunching right that followed. Perhaps he realised his terrible mistake in the split-second before the darkness.

In a final act of nonchalance, Canelo slid effortlessly beneath the left that was Kirkland’s last conscious act. Then he turned and ran to the corner post to celebrate, not even waiting for the fight’s official end. Carried by his momentum, Kirkland fell, spinning like a spent shell casing, bouncing to the ground arms akimbo, his bicep smeared with his mouth’s bright blood.

It was a spectacular KO and a deserved winner of this award purely on its aesthetic merits, but it’s also worth noting that it came at the right time: exactly one week after Floyd Mayweather vs Manny Pacquiao. Canelo’s destruction of Kirkland offered an alternative vision of boxing to the over-hyped and underwhelming superfight of the week before.

It showed that boxing can still be a violent ritual and a true spectacle. That’s why it’s TQBR’s 2015 Knockout of the Year.

About Alex McClintock

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